
fHEEL AND TOE ONLINE The official organ of the Victorian Race Walking Club 2015/2016 Number 45 16 August 2016 VRWC Preferred Supplier of Shoes, clothes and sporting accessories. Address: RUNNERS WORLD, 598 High Street, East Kew, Victoria (Melways 45 G4) Telephone: 03 9817 3503 Hours: Monday to Friday: 9:30am to 5:30pm Saturday: 9:00am to 3:00pm Website: http://www.runnersworld.com.au Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Runners-World/235649459888840 WALKER OF THE WEEK My Walker of the Week is pretty straight forward this week – it is of course 24 year old Dane Bird-Smith who took the bronze medal in the Olympic 20km walk in Rio last Friday afternoon. His time of 1:19:37 saw him only 23 seconds behind Chinese gold medallist Wang Zhen and was a 1 second PB, slightly faster than his 1:19:38, done in finishing 4 th in the IAAF Race Walking World Teams Championship 20km in Rome in May. Add to that his win in the World University Games in South Korea last year and his second placings in the last the Chinese 4 Day Racewalk Classics and you see a young walker with the world at his feet. And see a nice article from Athletics Australia to celebrate the bronze – http://athletics.com.au/News/bronze-for-the-birdman. The Australian 20km all-time rankings change slightly with Dane's faster time and he is certainly now within striking distance of all except Nathan Deakes whose 2005 time of 1:17:33 remains what is for the moment an untouchable standard. Rank Time Name State DOB Place Location Date Age 1 1:17.33 Nathan Deakes V 17/08/1977 1 Cixi City, China 23/04/2005 27 2 1:19.15 Luke Adams N 22/10/1976 7 Cheboksary, Russia 10/05/2008 31 3 1.19.15 Jared Tallent V 17/10/1984 1 Melbourne 13/02/2010 25 4 1:19.22 Dave Smith V 24/07/1955 1 Hobart 19/07/1987 31 5 1:19.33 Nick A'Hern N 06/01/1969 1 Melbourne 15/12/1990 21 6 1:19.37 Dane Bird-Smith Q 15/07/1992 3 Rio de Janiero, Brazil 08/12/2016 24 7 1:20.43 Andrew Jachno V 13/04/1962 1 Brisbane 26/08/1990 28 8 1:20.49 Dion Russell V 08/08/1975 1 Melbourne 19/03/1999 23 9 1:21.19 Simon Baker V 06/02/1958 1 Canberra 27/08/1988 30 10 1:21.36 Willi Sawall V 07/11/1941 1 Melbourne 04/07/1982 40 Dane leads the main group in the middle stages of the Olympic 20km walk last Friday (photo Jeff Salvage) 1 WHAT'S COMING UP • The 2016 Australian Roadwalk Champs will be held at Mt Stromlo in Canberra next Sunday August 21st. See our RWV page for the basic links - http://www.vrwc.org.au/2016AustRoadwalkChamps.shtml. Good luck to the small contingent of Victorians who are travelling to our national capital for the event. I believe the list reads as follows Open Men 20km Adam Garganis, Adam Patterson U20 Men 10km Reese Walmsley U20 Women 10km Emily Hamilton U18 Men 10km Kyle Swan U18 Women 5km Mackayla Davison, Madison Hill U16 Boys 5km Corey Dickson, Hayden Walmsley U16 Girls 5km Zahra Hayes, Rebecca Henderson, Kathleen O'Mahony U14 Girls 3km Kaylah Heikkila-Dubowik, Charlotte Hay, Alanna Peart • For those not going to Canberra, we have our usual club races at Middle Park. Remember that we prefer you to pre-enter via our online entry panel at http://vrwc.org.au/wp1/race-entries-2/. The timetable reads as follows Saturday 20th August 2016, Middle Park Prizes will be awarded to the winning, male and female for each race The winners are the walkers in each race to beat their season best time by the largest margin. 2.15pm 12km Beat Your Season Best Time Open 2.15pm 10km Beat Your Season Best Time Open 2.15pm 5km Beat Your Season Best Time Open 2.30pm 3km Beat Your Season Best Time Open 2.30pm 1.5km Beat Your Season Best Time Open • And looking a week further ahead, the Australian Masters 20km Roadwalk Championships will be held in Adelaide on Sunday 28 August. Entry form, etc, found at http://www.australianmastersathletics.org.au/2016/05/22/ama-20k- walk- championships-2016/. Entries close 20th August. OLYMPIC UPDATE The first of the Olympic walks was held last Friday afternoon at the beachside Rio suburb of Pontal. With a top temperature of 22C and with a light wind, conditions were good and there were plenty of good spots to watch what was one of the few free events of the Olympics. Unfortunately, the course was not ideal, with the 1km lap having very narrow turns at either end. Add to that the complete lack of facilities for spectators – no toilets, no stalls selling drinks or food or souvenirs – and an otherwise great event was diminished. Unless the organisers are prepared to spend a bit more money and provide some facilities for the spectators next Friday, it's going to be a tough day for both competitors ans spectators, with the 50km at 8AM and the women's 20km at 2:30PM. Men 20km Race Walk, Friday 12 August, 2:30PM Phil Minshull reported very nicely for the IAAF (see https://www.iaaf.org/news/report/rio-2016-mens-20km-race-walk1). Despite the presence of Olympic champion Chen Ding and world champion Miguel Angel Lopez, the pre-race favourite on current form was China’s Wang Zhen and the winner at the IAAF World Race Walking Team Championships in Rome back in May didn’t disappoint. He pulled away from a seven-strong leading pack at 17km and quickly established a lead which proved to be insurmountable before winning in 1:19:14. His strategy was a mixture of astute championship racing and pure gambler’s luck. Great Britain’s Tom Bosworth was the leader for much of the first half of the race, edging to the front just before the 4km mark and then laying down the gauntlet for everyone to follow. Initially, he was tracked by Kenya’s African champion Samuel Gathimba who followed him a few strides behind until just before 8km, when he got on the Briton’s shoulder. However, Gathimba was to start struggling soon afterwards and drifted backwards rapidly before dropping out just after 18km. Bosworth passed the halfway point on his own in 40:10 with Japan’s Daisuke Matsunaga coming out of the chasing pack and passing 10km five seconds in arrears, with the 22-strong group another seven seconds further back. Notable at this point was that Chen Ding was almost certainly not going to retain his title or even get on the podium. The 2012 Olympic gold medallist had looked uncomfortable in the leading pack for several kilometres. After the 10 th km he had got detached and was trailing six seconds off the back of the main pack and down in 26 th place. Lopez also looked far from his usual calm and controlled self and was hanging on grimly at the rear of the challenging group. Over the next 2km, Bosworth sped up and was within eight minutes for the next 2km split around the Pontal course. But Matsunaga was race walking even faster and had closed the gap to two seconds, while China’s Cai Zelin decided to protectively cover the two men in front of him and had pushed hard to remove himself from the pack. World Race Walking 2 Team Championships silver medallist Cai continued to motor and overtook Matsunaga and then Bosworth but the pack also started to increase their pace, consuming Bosworth and Matsunaga just before the 14km checkpoint and Cai shortly after, making it a 12-man mass together entering the final quarter of the race. The pack – which also contained local hope and Brazilian record-holder Caio Bonfim, who was getting rousing cheers every step of the way – was reduced to nine over the next lap with Cai, whose cadence can best be described as a resembling a boxer doing his road workout, pushing the pace at the front. This remained the state of affairs until Wang, a much more fluent and elegant race walker than his teammate, made his decisive bid for glory with 3km to go. He quickly put four seconds between himself and the chasers, still led by his compatriot Cai, with the penultimate lap taking just 7:42, the fastest split of the race at that point. This was just a prelude to what Wang was able to unleash over the final 2km, a split of 7:26, which Cai had no way of countering. After Wang had crossed the line in 1:19:14, Cai came home 12 seconds later, the winner having put an additional eight seconds between himself and the man in second place over the final 2km. Coming home third was an utterly delighted Dane Bird-Smith of Australia who managed to pull away from Bonfim over the final 1km lap to take the bronze medal in a personal best of 1:19:37. The evidence of what getting a medal meant to Bird-Smith could be seen barely a minute after he crossed the line when the realisation that he would be on the podium led to him starting to sob uncontrollably on the shoulder of Bosworth. Bonfim missed out on what would have been a memorable medal by five seconds – the highest any Brazilian race walker of either gender had finished before at the Olympics was 14th – but he had the consolation of setting a national record of 1:19:42.
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